Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Siding with terrorists?

The Trump administra­tion won’t step in to help see that financiers of terror are punished

- Shawn McCoy Shawn McCoy is the publisher of Inside Sources, for which he wrote this piece.

President Donald Trump campaigned as a lawand-order candidate who would crack down on terrorism. He is supposedly a friend of Israel. And the president is never for a lack of words, even when he should be. So it might surprise some that the Trump administra­tion is choosing to remain silent in a court case as American victims seek to make financiers of terror pay for their gruesome crimes.

The issue is so clear cut that firebrands of the left and right, such as Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ted Cruz, are miraculous­ly on the same side of the debate. Dozens of U.S. senators and members of Congress from both parties have called on the administra­tion to file a brief with the Supreme Court, but yet to no avail.

The case of Sokolow v. Palestinia­n Liberation Organizati­on et al. reaches back to seven terror attacks that took place between 2001 and 2004. The PLO and Palestinia­n Authority supported a campaign of terror in Israel that killed and maimed hundreds of civilians, including U.S. citizens. In 2015, a jury found the PLO and PA were liable for the acts of terror. The result of the case was that the victims and their families were awarded $655.5 million. But that wasn’t the end of it.

The 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the case last year on the grounds the attack happened overseas and is beyond the jurisdicti­on of U.S. courts. While the Supreme Court has previously ruled that American courts shouldn’t have jurisdicti­on in cases with foreign plaintiffs, foreign defendants and based on foreign conduct, in this case, the victims were Americans.

The courts have also given deference over foreign policy to the legislativ­e and executive branches. Because of the threat of terror against Americans traveling abroad, Congress passed a law — the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1992 — that provides U.S. courts extraterri­torial jurisdicti­on. That law was a direct response to a 1985 PLO attack on an Italian cruise ship, as terrorists seized the ship, shot and threw overboard a wheelchair-bound American, Leon Klinghoffe­r.

The law maintains broad support from both Congress and former leading officials in the executive branch, including former FBI Director Louis Freeh and Former Attorney General John Ashcroft, who filed a brief with the Supreme Court supporting the victims.

Now Sokolow v. PLO waits for the Supreme Court to decide if it will hear the case or allow the 2nd Circuit ruling to stand. In June, the Supreme Court specifical­ly requested that the Trump administra­tion offer its view of the case. But Solicitor General Noel Francisco has taken no action.

Critics speculate that the State Department has been the roadblock, as well as the Justice Department. Holding the Palestinia­n Authority liable for its past violence could weaken America’s relationsh­ip with the Palestinia­ns and destabiliz­e an already indebted PA, and so Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and career bureaucrat­s in his department may be siding with the terrorists over the American victims.

Inside Sources contacted a man who previously held Mr. Francisco’s job: Theodore B. Olson. Mr. Olson is Supreme Court counsel for the victims in the Sokolow case, and explained, “The Justice Department should have filed its brief months ago. The lower court decision cripples a vital anti-terrorism statute and essentiall­y tells foreign terrorists that they may kill and maim Americans with impunity. This is not a close call.”

Mr. Olson made it clear where the blame for inaction lies: “The Justice Department has a crystalcle­ar obligation to defend the law that Congress passed. This kind of delay could be caused only if one of the ‘client’ agencies within the government wanted it, and there’s only one agency of which I am aware that takes calls from foreign terrorist government­s but not their American victims.”

Writing to Mr. Tillerson and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a bipartisan group of 24 U.S. senators explained: “If left to stand, the [Second Circuit] decision casts severe doubt on the continued ability of other American victims of internatio­nal terrorist attacks to obtain some semblance of justice in our nation’s courts against the perpetrato­rs, and undermines a key counterter­rorism tool that was deliberate­ly crafted by Congress with the support and assistance of your department­s.”

The question now is whether Messrs. Tillerson, Sessions, and Francisco will act in defense of terror’s victims or give their de facto support to a terrorist government by doing nothing.

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